Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Pushpa Pai
SNDT Womens University
1. Introduction
India is said to be a socio-linguistic giant and the nerve system of this giant is multilingualism. Indian multilingualism is huge in size, having 1620 mother tongues reduced to 200 languages. With the population of many of minorities larger than European countries(Annamalai E. 2001) 1. This multilingual character of India is represented by Mumbai2 City, the industrial capital of India, where people from all over come and settle down. In Mumbai every child is exposed to at least four languages right from its infancy. India is not only multilingual but multicultural too, having multiple religions, castes, sects, professions and lifestyles.
1.1. Culture
Culture can be described as totality of thought processes, belief systems and behavioural patterns of a community, handed over to them by previous generations. Culture is community specific; it is the peculiarities of the people, who have developed a worldview according to their needs, their modes of living shaped by their geographical and social environments.
1.2. Language
Language is the expression of all these things evolved through communication among members of the community and the culture it represents. Language, like culture, is community specific and is intricately interwoven with the culture it represents. Language helps members of the community to establish, assert and maintain their identity as individuals and as a group, bringing among them a sense of solidarity.
1.3. Education
Education grooms children in such a way that they become capable of shouldering responsibilities of their adult life with confidence. Educational system relies on language to achieve this. Language acts as medium of instruction on the one hand and as a means of establishing rapport with their wards on the other. It helps to develop thoughts that need to be presented with integrity and compactness. The relation between thoughts and language is not erratic, but rule governed. Communication is not passing of information, but involves conceptualization of concepts and experiences, of identification and classification, of argumentation and assertion through correct language (Pattanayak D.P.1987.) 3. The task of an Educationist is to develop aesthetic sensibility and proper attitude towards the fellow beings and the world, so that they can live a healthy social life and contribute meaningfully to the society they live in.
2005 Pushpa Pai. ISB4: Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Bilingualism, ed. James Cohen, Kara T. McAlister, Kellie Rolstad, and Jeff MacSwan, 1794-1806. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press.
1795
vocational courses, (that often offer stipend to student who work as apprentice) and take up blue collared jobs.
3. Multilingualism
Every child is born with a language acquisition device having innate properties that plays a role in acquiring knowledge of language. This innateness is a biological endowment that Chomsky refers to as Principles and Parameters. According to this theory, there is a universal grammar where Principles are general features, while parameters are variables left open in the statement of principles that account for the diversity found in languages. Grammar is a collection of choices (e.g. a choice between SOV and SVO patterns of sentences). They define the limited numbers of grammatically permitted choices from the universal grammar menu of options. There are also lexical facts. Once the vocabulary is learnt and grammatical patterns are fixed, the whole system falls in its place and general principles programmed into general organ, just churns away to yield all the particulars of the language concerned (Chomsky as quoted in Jenkins, 2000) In other words, there are different grammatical systems based on the choice of different parameters, when the child is exposed to them, its innate capacity gets activated and it acquires knowledge of the rules of the language while using it for communication. When the child is exposed to more than one such linguistic system, it acquires more than one language and is known as multilingual.
3.2. Phonology
Phonology is the study of sound system of a language. Following are a few examples of differences in the sound systems of languages in Mumbai. Length is Phonemic in Hindi, English, and the Dravidian languages, but it is not so in Marathi. Examples: In Hindi, /piTaa/ got beaten /piiTaa/ beat if the length in the vowel is not carefully pronounced the person would become different, or the
1796
contrast in the pairs like /live/ and /leave/ or /shit/ and /sheet/, if not carefully maintained one can land in difficulty. The contrast between /e/ and /ei/ is not found in Marathi thus loosing difference between the pairs of sentences I gave my urine sample for testing and I gave my urine for tasting. Gujarati does not have distinction between /E/ and /ei/ as also /O/ and /au/, so the snakes get served in the hole instead of snacks in the hall. Aspiration is a common feature of all Indo-Aryan languages and is absent in Dravidian. Hence if the contrast between /baaii/ woman and /bhaaii/ brother is not maintained, it may lead to change in the sex of the person under consideration.
3.3. Morphology
Morphology deals with grammatical sub-systems of words and the variation they undergo while entering into sentences. The differences in all sub-system are naturally present. Examples of gender sub system cited here as a sample. In all the Dravidian languages gender distinction is human and nonhuman, (except in Telugu where it is male/ non-male), which means all males are masculine, all females are feminine and every thing else is neuter. In Indo-Aryan languages gender is grammatical, and is seen in noun-verb concord. Again, Marathi has three genders, Hindi has two, and Bengali or English none. Examples: In Marathi /chahaa/ tea is masculine, coffee a borrowed word is feminine, and /duudh/ milk is neuter All the three words are liquids and are breakfast items, thus belonging to the same semantic field. In Hindi same tea and coffee are feminine but milk is masculine.
3.4. Syntax
Syntax deals with the structure of the sentences. It is also concerned with the role a word plays in assigning meaning to sentences, for example The order of the words in sentences is very important in English. The meaning in a sentence like John chases Jane. would change, if the order of the two nouns in it is interchanged. In Indian languages, inflectional markers define the role of words in a sentence. If we take the same sentence John-ne Jane-ca paaThlaag kelaa it wouldnt matter if the place of John and Jane is changed because /-ne/ and /-ca/ tell us that John is chasing and it is Jane, who is being chased. This difference in sentence patterns results in errors in writings of English learners, as in T.V. watches housewives in the afternoon.
3.5. Lexicon
Lexicon deals with vocabulary items. India is known as a linguistic area and this is evident from the lexical items. There are either cognates or borrowed words from Sanskrit, abundantly found in almost all the languages of India. But sometimes the same word may carry different connotation or even entirely different meaning. For example, /sansaar / means world in Hindi and Gujarati, but family life in Marathi and Bengali, /sanshodhan/ in Hindi is editing while in Marathi it is research. /khaalii/ in Hindi is empty, in Marathi it is under, below. Most interesting is the word /baaii/. In Marathi it means a woman of any status, whether she is a head of the institution or sweeper woman, she would be referred to and addressed with the same term. In Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, /baaii/ means either mother or elder sister, and in most of the other parts of India it means a prostitute. Many have gotten into an awkward situation because of they did not know the different connotations of the word. If one vocable can cause so much of confusion, one can imagine how difficult it would be to master the entire vocabulary of all the languages the children are expected to learn!
1797
4. Multiculturalism
The culture and environment in which the language is spoken, determine structure of language and its semantic networking. Again, as Whorfian hypothesis goes, its the conceptual categorization of the world is determined by the structure of the language. Since the structures of languages differ considerably, the conceptual categorization also differs from one language to another Therefore the contrast between semantic set cannot be studied without discovering contrast that exists in the referential world, that is the world in which the members of a community live and do things together.(Manjali F.C.1998) Meaning components are combined in lexical items but are encapsulated in different languages in different ways based on their cultural and geographical background. It requires a special skill to remember the differences According to C.Andrade, the Cultural Anthropologist, the cultures have consensual domains having cognitive schemas that are inter-subjectively shared by social groups.(As quoted in Manjali, 1998). These are throughout and forever reconstituted by cultural blending and children learning a second or a foreign language have to deal with the absence of similar cognitive domains. This becomes a learning issue. The example of kinship terms is cited here to show the same referential world, that has different semantic network.
Every language has its system of linguistic etiquettes and formalities. These rules help in maintaining congenial inter-personal relations. In Indian languages, the inter-personal relations are marked mainly by pronominal forms.
1798
Plural forms are used to express respect to a person for one single person, if s/he happens to be elder, or senior in status or a stranger. This is a pan Indian feature. In English Formal relations are expressed in a very different way, not by using plural form. Students of English find it difficult to adjust psychologically to this fact, especially when they have to refer to or address their male professor as he instead of they. Again in Hindi there are three different forms of second person pronouns. /tu/is used to refer or address a person of lower status or caste and has derogatory connotation, /tum/ denotes familiarity and is used for friends or equals. /aap/ as a singular form conveys semi-formal relation while plural /aap/ denotes formal relations One needs to learn these rules of formality to attain communicative competence and smooth social relations
1799
distinct languages. Many children speak one of the dialects at home, Mumbai Hindi which is a pidginised variety as contact language out side their homes and at school they learn highly stylized variety of the textbooks. This is true of all languages but worst is the case of Hindi that has eleven dialects almost like distinct independent languages. This, very often, proves very traumatic to children just entering school. Not only that these languages have different linguistic systems but the rules of social verbal etiquettes are also different in different sociolects. Mumbai Municipal corporation schools use first six weeks of the school to introduce these etiquettes by exposing the children to the standard variety through nursery rhymes, stories from Mythology or folk literature and group activity in which they are also taught the sense of hygiene and matters of every day affairs. This has proved very useful in overcoming the initial shock of communicative gap among the children. Again, several believe that students belonging to low-income group or low social status lack language and they are treated with negative attitude both by teachers and by fellow students. But as professor Labov says, these children dont lack language but the sophistication of the standard variety. A survey was conducted (by Language Development Project, a body set up by municipal corporation to study problems in language education of slum dwelling children with the help of Ford Foundation), to find out the vocabulary control of Gujarati speaking preschool children, because their textbooks were being rewritten. It was found that the vocabulary of slum dwelling children was greater than that of the children coming from middle class. But it contained a large number of taboo words not appropriate for textbooks or school. A study was also done of the schools around which the fishermen community of Mumbai lived. It was found, that there was a heavy drop out rate among the children by the time they reached secondary stage. The observation of these children revealed, that the children use their own language in the first and second standards in all their school activities, in the third and the fourth they mix the code of their dialect with and the standard. They appeared quite comfortable with this mixture but by the time they reach the fifth standard they start realizing that their language is not the right one. By this time they also reach their adolescence, adding a psychological dimension to their problems, and then dropping out from school begins. It is essential to impart education in standard language. Is it possible to write textbooks in so many dialects? Who will write them? Mumbai Municipal Corporation that imparts educations in eight languages finds it difficult to get teachers and writers to write good and appropriate textbooks. In spite of spending a lot of money on this enterprise, the results are never satisfactory. The solution perhaps lies in letting the children use their language in the classrooms to initiate them in literacy, as was found among fishermen children, but there should be gradual and conscious efforts to transfer to the standard variety. The question is not whether to allow the children to use their home language in school, but for how long? Children should understand that every one speaks the home language, but they must also learn the standard language to be successful in school. Teachers should explain to them the role of each of the varieties; the standard variety is for life out side their homes, to be used in public affairs, and their dialect for private life at home. This would give them the psychological stability and group solidarity. Language Development Project conducted an experiment to try this out with positive results. It was more difficult to convince the teachers to accept this method, than transferring speech habits of children from dialect to standard. (In this experiment students were allowed to use words, sometimes even structures, from the dialect they spoke at home. The experiment was tried in the first grade in ten schools of Mumbai Municipal Corporation. This was done to initiate them in literacy. Once they mastered initial reading skills, they were introduced to regular prescribed textbook in standard language. It needed only a few weeks for the children from experimental group to comfortably take exams with children from control group. They had begun looking into differences in the two varieties themselves. It turned out to be a special activity for them to locate differences in the dialects of other students who spoke different varieties.)
1800
higher education and administration, science and technology, international commerce, western culture and pop entertainment, is perceived as all powerful and ticket to upward mobility.(Sridhar. Kamal. K. 2002) Hence a large number of parents prefer to send their children to English medium schools. The English medium schools are equal in number with Marathi medium schools (and Marathi speaking population in Mumbai is 41% according to 1991 census). English in these schools is treated as a first language because it is the medium of instruction, but it is definitely a second language for the students. The children with good aptitude for language and a good intelligence can cope with the education, but the children with average intelligence, who are in large numbers in a class, find language as the barrier to understand different subjects they need to study. There are normally sixty or more children in a class making the problem more difficult. These children most often learn their lessons by rote for examinations. Thus failing to learn language skills and consequently they end up learning nothing. Some schools use a bilingual method to teach subjects, for which textbooks are in English. The teacher explains concepts in the native language and the students write their exams in English. These students seem to learn there subjects better than those who havent studied through bilingual method, but this method also fails in training them to acquire language skills. Govt. of Maharashtra has very recently introduced English as one of the languages to be taught from the very first grade. The Govt. has tried to involve linguists in planning the courses to introduce a communicative approach that advocates development of language skills. The Govt. has done this to assure those parents who thought that their children are being left behind in life, because they could not study in English medium schools.
1801
done of language skills, but of grammar rules and the information in the text concerned. Infact, the teachers themselves do not differentiate between teaching a language, teaching through a language, and teaching about a language, or teaching of language and literature. All this leads to rote learning for examinations and students are found waiting to get rid of the language courses as soon as possible. Introducing second languages at school is a necessity in a city as multilingual as Mumbai. Psychologists say that language acquisition device is at its sharpest between the age of three and twelve. It thus becomes necessary to acquaint teachers about the linguistic system of different languages and the modern methods of language teaching. This will help to build an empathetic attitude towards the students and to create interest among them to learn the languages.
1802
the four skills are taken care of. Students learn to handle complex communicative situations through pair and group work. They also learn basic reading and writing skills. These basic skills help the children in their day-to-day affairs. But that is not enough. They also need to develop higher- level language skills useful for academic purpose. Critical reading, discussing the material read, and judging its merit should be a part of the language syllabus. Reading thought provoking academic matters should also be encouraged in language classrooms for higher- level reading skill. Writing is another skill, which needs special grooming for academic purposes. Putting down thoughts on paper helps to focus on the topic, it also helps to check its validity, effectiveness and relevance. Besides, it provides a scope to correct and improve the written material, leading to more organized writing. To be a good writer one needs to learn writing in different genres, styles useful for different purposes. In addition to these measures, teachers should also be trained in following areas: Language is the most powerful tool in education, hence needs to handle it carefully. Student teachers in Mumbai study about language development as a part of general learning theory under psychology of education. They learn the Theories propagated by Asubel, Brown, Piaget and Vygotsky, but it is not emphasized that language is an arbitrary but a well- organized system, and that the each system has its own peculiarities because of the choice of different parameters, how they are acquired by children and what is their role in acquiring knowledge. Hence Applied Linguistics should be made a compulsory subject at B Ed along with other subjects like psychology, sociology and philosophy of education. This would help remove the myths regarding language teaching. At the same time it is necessary to make teachers realize that language is an important tool in educational career. And lastly, Multilingualism should be looked at as an advantage offered to us by history rather than a problem. As has been mentioned above, Multilingualism helps to develop meta-cognitive and metalinguistic skills. At a very early age children learn to express the same thought with different codes in different languages. At societal level they understand the cultural differences leading to different norms to be observed in interpersonal relations in different discourse situations Thus it teaches them to live harmoniously with others in the society. As Pandit puts it, Language is not interpreted as an autonomous system outside culture but as a manifestation of culture. As a system it is designed to accommodate any kind of cultural diversity and plurality. Multiculturalism in linguistic societies and heterogeneity in languages are the consequences of people living together, working together, and sharing the services and goods of the same community This linguistic community does not require an imposition of homogeneity as it is a design of diversity.
1803
Notes
1. Map of India.
Kashmir Punjabi
Telugu Kannada
Malayalam Tamil
2. Mumbai (formerly Bombay), is located on India's west coast, and is a major political, cultural, and economic hub. It is the capital of Maharashtra state. Mumbai lies on an 18-km long peninsula whose width varies from 4.75 km in the north to 1.3 km at the southern tip. It is one of the world's largest and most crowded cities with a population of 14 million and an area of 1,467 sq. km. Its population is estimated to grow at 3.1% per year to 22 million by 2011.
3. Maharashtra is situated on the west coast of India and is surrounded by Arabian Sea on one side and the states of Gujarat, Madhya-Pradesh, Orissa, Karnataka, and Goa around its three sides. It is divided in twenty-two districts having Marathi as its state Language and nearly ten major geographical dialects, some of which are so different that they can be independent languages
4. Sixteen major languages spoken in Mumbai are: Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi, Urdu, Tamil, Telugu, Tulu, Kannada, Malayalam, Bengali, Oriya, Sindhi, Assamese, Punjabi, Kashmiri, and Konkani. Three Official languages are as follows: Marathi used in the state administration, and Hindi / English in National and International administration. 5. The classification presented here is not so neat. People from slums with higher aspirations also send their children to English medium schools these children do not get any home support as the parents are either not educated through any formal system or do not know English. 6. Mother Tongue is the technical status of Mother Tongue because the language name, that a speaker offers to a census enumerator, is a name that often marks their identity rather than realities of their linguistic usages. (Annamalai. E. 2001)
1804
7. Eight Languages as first language: Private Private (Aided) (Unaided) 169 44 31 59 1 0 0 85 73 29 1 21 0 0 0 418
Municipal Marathi Hindi Urdu Gujarati Tamil Kannada Telugu English 459 233 203 116 50 45 44 41
There were schools in Sindhi and Malayalam some twelve years ago but they closed down because parents preferred to send their children to English medium school. There are no schools for these children after upper primary. There are only two schools in Tamil and two in Telugu run by private organization and funded by Municipal Corporation up to tenth standard. Education is not available in these languages after that. There also some schools run by private organizations for Bengali, Sindhi and many other languages which go unreported. 8. The eleven dialects of Hindi are as follows: Awadhi, Bangru, Bhojpuri, Braj, Bundeli, Chattisgarhi, Magahi, Maithili, Pahadi. Rajasthani, and Khadi-Boli, the last one is the accepted as the standard variety. Out of these eleven Maithili and Rajasthani have already been accepted as independent languages by Sahitya Academy for awards given every year for excellence in literature in the languages recognized by Govt. 9. Census Of India 1991, Maharashtra State / District Profile numerically strong languages in descending order, Table 30. Greater Bombay District (i. e. Municipal Corporation). 10. Language Development Project was established in late seventies with funds from Ford Foundation, that looks into the problems of teaching languages in municipal schools. It mainly caters to the needs of hutment children or the children from streets. Some of the work by this project has already been reported above in the main body of the paper. There are graver problems that faces the Municipal Corporation related to children, who live among diverse language speakers and are exposed to a kind of language that can be expressed in Nina Martysis words, Multilingual Mumbai, microcosm of India, has twisted many tongues well and truly out of shape, to forge its own robust speak (Times Of India 8/5/02). To train the children, who have learnt this language in an effort to survive in difficult circumstances, in the school language and provide them meaningful education is the real challenge faced by the teachers here, especially when there are a lot of distractions out side the classroom.
References
Annamalai, E.2001. Managing Multilingualism in India _ _Political and Linguistic Manifestation in Language and Development Series, no. 8. Chomsky N (2000): New Horizons in study of Language and Mind, Cambridge University Press.
1805
Jenkins L: Biolinguistics, Cambridge University Press. Manjali F D (1998): Language Culture and Cognition, Bahri Publication, New Delhi. Mohanty A K (1994): Bilingualism in Multilingual Society, Central Institute of Indian Languages Silver Jubilee Series, Mysore Pattanayak D P (1981): Multilingualism and Mother Tongue Education, Oxford University Press. Singh U N (1998): Second Turn Literary Translation, Bahri Publication. Sridhar Kamal K. 2002. Societal Multilingualism and World Englishes; Their Implications for Teaching ESL in Indian Journal of Applied Linguistics, vol. 28, Bahri Publications, New-Delhi. Verma S K (1994): Language and Education.
1806
ISB4: Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Bilingualism edited by James Cohen, Kara T. McAlister, Kellie Rolstad, and Jeff MacSwan
Cascadilla Press Somerville, MA 2005
Copyright information
ISB4: Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Bilingualism 2005 Cascadilla Press, Somerville, MA. All rights reserved ISBN 978-1-57473-210-8 CD-ROM ISBN 978-1-57473-107-1 library binding (5-volume set) A copyright notice for each paper is located at the bottom of the first page of the paper. Reprints for course packs can be authorized by Cascadilla Press.
Ordering information
To order a copy of the proceedings, contact: Cascadilla Press P.O. Box 440355 Somerville, MA 02144, USA phone: 1-617-776-2370 fax: 1-617-776-2271 sales@cascadilla.com www.cascadilla.com